Horses for Sale in Bahama NC, Advance NC

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Donkey - Horse for Sale in Bahama, NC 27503
Reba
Reba is a beautiful large, red roan, female donkey. Gorgeous how she will d..
Bahama, North Carolina
Red Roan
Donkey
Mare
10
Bahama, NC
NC
Sold
Banks
14 year old Missouri Fox Trot Gelding..
Advance, North Carolina
Chestnut
Missouri Fox Trotter
Gelding
20
Advance, NC
NC
$2,700
Shesa Golden Clu
Red Roan Mare, 12 yrs old, Qtr. & gaited. Great temperament, willing to ple..
Martinsville, Virginia
Red Roan
American Warmblood
Mare
18
Martinsville, VA
VA
$2,500
Any
I am looking for a new addition to our family a friesian mare or gelding mu..
Meadows Of Dan, Virginia
Black
Friesian
Mare
25
Meadows Of Dan, VA
VA
Contact
Pearla
Great and beautiful horse ready to ride and it’s trained Contact me for mo..
Reidsville, North Carolina
Brown
Quarter Horse
Gelding
7
Reidsville, NC
NC
$5,500
Quarter Horse
All around great horse! -Good ground manners; can stand without being tied..
Clemmons, North Carolina
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
-
Clemmons, NC
NC
$2,500
Arabian Gelding
youtu.be/2wGJiMmbjwY Here is a slide show of Jade My Jewel on youtube. Jad..
Oxford, North Carolina
Gray
Arabian
Gelding
26
Oxford, NC
NC
$1,200

About Reidsville, NC

The early roots of Reidsville, incorporated in 1873 by the State Legislature, date back to the early 19th century when William Wright of the Little Troublesome Creek area owned a tavern and store on the road connecting Danville and Salem. This outpost, called Wright’s Crossroads, was the earliest settlement in the present-day city and was overseen by Wright’s son, Nathan, and then Nathan Wright’s son-in-law, Robert Payne Richardson. Richardson’s home, built in 1842 on a knoll overlooking Little Troublesome Creek, still remains on Richardson Drive and has the distinction of being the oldest standing house in the city. Reuben Reid of the Hogan’s Creek area moved his family, including wife, Elizabeth Williams Settle, and son, David Settle Reid, to a 700-acre (2.8 km 2) farm on the ridge between Wolf Island and Little Troublesome creeks in May 1814. Reuben Reid became a successful farmer, operated a store and a public inn maintained in a private home and served the county as a constable and justice of the peace.